468 résultats
296pp., 22cm., reliure cart. (dos en cuir avec titre et décorations dorés), tranches et deuilles de garde marbrées, bon état
84pp.+ 8pp.ills.hors-texte + 1 carte dépliante, br.orig., dans la série "Collection nationale"
xxiv + 200pp., br. (couv.peu réparée), qqs.rousseurs
Paris, Ambroise Dupont, 1828. In-8 relié demi-basane blonde, dos lisse très orné, XII + 367 pages. Mors fragiles, petit manque à la coiffe supérieure, une trace d'humidité à la charnière des premières pages. Malgré les défauts signalés reste un exemplaire correct.
In -8°, pp. (88), 763, 5 pp. bb. Legatura in pelle di scrofa coeva con fregi ai piatti e nervi al dorso. Terza edizione, dopo quella di Firenze dell’88 e la prima di Colonia dell’89. Il libro, celebre e ampiamente ristampato, contiene la prima descrizione mai pubblicata della pianta del tè. Fine binding in contemporary pigskin. The third edition, after the Florence’s one and the first, from Cologne. The book, widely reprinted, contains the first description of the tea plant ever published in Europe.
xxix + 23 + 1072pp., includes bibliographical references and index, (texts in italian & latin), softcover, 24cm., VG, in the series "Monumenta Historica Societatis Jesu" volume 112
In-8 (114 x 175 mm), demi-basane fauve à la Bradel, dos lisse orné d’une guirlande dorée répétée en place des nerfs, pièce de titre de veau noir (reliure du XVIIIe), 309, (71) p., page de titre entièrement gravée dans un encadrement architectonique. Importante édition des Constitutions de la Société de Jésus, l’acte fondateur et le texte de base de l'organisation de la Compagnie, rédigé en espagnol par Ignace de Loyola et traduit en latin par Juan de Polanco, son secrétaire et assistant. Cette édition de 1583 est la première à contenir le dernier état du texte révisé en latin par Ignace de Loyola avant sa mort ainsi que ses notes et commentaires, disposés en marge ou intégrés dans des blocs de texte en caractères italiques. Ces commentaires avaient été d’abord publiés séparément. Elle est également la première à contenir, en pagination continue, "L’examen général", soit les conditions requises pour être admis au sein de la Société ("Primum ac generale examen iis omnibus qui in Societatem Iesu admitti petent proponendum" : p. [3]-48) ainsi qu'un index général. (Olschki, II, 2499: "Edition fort bien imprimée et peu commune". Backer-Sommervogel, V, 77. Manque à Palau. A.F. Johnson, ‘Catalogue of Italian engraved title pages in the 16e c.’, 19, 20). Petit cachet ex-libris de bibliothèque jésuite. Mors et dos frottés. Bon exemplaire, frais, assez grand de marges, bien conservé.
Reliure de l'éditeur. 158 pages; 17x25cm.
Fully printable 509 page PDF listing over 2,000 works, searched in seconds, non-English titles translated, this book has been produced in CD-Rom version only, CD in case. New. Compiled from numerous sources by a well-known medical author; Catalogues books, articles and manuscripts written in 10 European languages; Annotations and translations: English; 33MB PDF - Best viewed in Adobe Reader 6.0 or 7.0: Electronic search tools; Small page format for easy reading; Collation, biography & illustrations; Manual search tools: Topic cues in margins - Alphabetical index of authors; Appendix: A New Translation of Cleyer on Tongue Diagnosis 1682.
Very Good Turkish, Ottoman (1500-1928) Original wrappers. 12mo. (16 x 12 cm). In Ottoman script. 44 p. Hejra-Hijri: 1304 = Gregorian: 1887. Extremely rare first edition of this Ottoman edition of 'history of the Jesuits'. This book has been abridged and translated from Taxil's work. Marie Joseph Gabriel Antoine Jogand-Pagès, better known by the pen name Léo Taxil was a French writer and journalist who became known for his strong anti-Catholic and anti-clerical views. He is also known for the Taxil hoax, a spurious expose of Freemasonry and the Roman Catholic Church's opposition to it. Marie Joseph Gabriel Antoine Jogand-Pagès was born in Marseille, and at the age of five, he was placed into a Jesuit seminary. After spending his childhood years in the seminary, he became disillusioned with the Catholic faith and began to see the religious ideology as socially harmful. Taxil first became known for writing anti-Clerical or anti-Catholic books, notably "La Bible amusante" (The Amusing Bible) and "La Vie de Jesus" (The Life of Jesus), in which Taxil satirically pointed out inconsistencies, errors, and false beliefs presented in these religious works. In his other books Les Debauches d'un confesseur (with Karl Milo), Les Pornographes sacrés: la confession et les confesseurs, and Les Maîtresses du Pape, Taxil portrays leaders of the Catholic Church as hedonistic creatures exploring their fetishes in the manner of the Marquis de Sade. In 1879, he was tried at the Seine Assizes for writing a pamphlet A Bas la Calotte ("Down with the Cloth"), which was accused of insulting a religion recognized by the state, but he was acquitted. In 1885, he professed conversion to Catholicism, was solemnly received into the church, and renounced his earlier works. In the 1890s, he wrote a series of pamphlets and books denouncing Freemasonry, charging their lodges with worshiping the devil and alleging that Diana Vaughan had written for him her confessions of the Satanic "Palladian" cult. The book had great sales among Catholics, although Diana Vaughan never appeared in public. In 1892, Taxil also began to publish a paper, La France chrétienne anti-maçonnique (Christian Antimasonic France), with his staunch anti-Masonic publishing friend, Abel Clarin de la Rive. In 1887, he had an audience with Pope Leo XIII, who rebuked the bishop of Charleston for denouncing the anti-Masonic confessions as a fraud and, in 1896, sent his blessing to an anti-Masonic Congress of Trent. Doubts about Vaughan's veracity and even her existence began to grow, and finally, Taxil promised to produce her at a lecture to be delivered by him on 19 April 1897. To the amazement of the audience (which included a number of priests), he announced that Diana was one of a series of hoaxes. He had begun, he said, by persuading the commandant of Marseille that the harbor was infested with sharks, and a ship was sent to destroy them. Next, he invented an underwater city in Lake Geneva, drawing tourists and archaeologists to the spot. He thanked the bishops and Catholic newspapers for facilitating his crowning hoax, namely his conversion, which had exposed the anti-Masonic fanaticism of many Catholics. Diana Vaughan was revealed to be a simple typist in his employ, who laughingly allowed her name to be used by him. The audience received these revelations with indignation and contempt. Afterward, Taxil left the hall, where policemen escorted him to a neighboring café. He then moved away from Paris. He died in Sceaux in 1907. An extremely rare first translation in Ottoman Turkish. Özege 9775. First Edition.
Very Good Greek, Modern (post 1453) Contemporary fine leather bdg. Demy 8vo. (22 x 15 cm). In Greek. 1118 p., richly illustrated (b/w ills.). Period bindery label of E. Watson in London. Ex-library copy on fourth blank page. Otherwise a very good copy. First and extremely rare translation into Greek of Taxil's 'Myste`res de la Franc-Mac?onnerie'. Mysteries of Freemasonry. Marie Joseph Gabriel Antoine Jogand-Pagès, better known by the pen name Léo Taxil was a French writer and journalist who became known for his strong anti-Catholic and anti-clerical views. He is also known for the Taxil hoax, a spurious expose of Freemasonry and the Roman Catholic Church's opposition to it. Marie Joseph Gabriel Antoine Jogand-Pagès was born in Marseille, and at the age of five, he was placed into a Jesuit seminary. After spending his childhood years in the seminary, he became disillusioned with the Catholic faith and began to see the religious ideology as socially harmful. Taxil first became known for writing anti-Clerical or anti-Catholic books, notably "La Bible amusante" (The Amusing Bible) and "La Vie de Jesus" (The Life of Jesus), in which Taxil satirically pointed out inconsistencies, errors, and false beliefs presented in these religious works. In his other books Les Debauches d'un confesseur (with Karl Milo), Les Pornographes sacrés: la confession et les confesseurs, and Les Maîtresses du Pape, Taxil portrays leaders of the Catholic Church as hedonistic creatures exploring their fetishes in the manner of the Marquis de Sade. In 1879, he was tried at the Seine Assizes for writing a pamphlet A Bas la Calotte ("Down with the Cloth"), which was accused of insulting a religion recognized by the state, but he was acquitted. In 1885, he professed conversion to Catholicism, was solemnly received into the church, and renounced his earlier works. In the 1890s, he wrote a series of pamphlets and books denouncing Freemasonry, charging their lodges with worshiping the devil and alleging that Diana Vaughan had written for him her confessions of the Satanic "Palladist" cult. The book had great sales among Catholics, although Diana Vaughan never appeared in public. In 1892, Taxil also began to publish a paper, La France chrétienne anti-maçonnique (Christian Antimasonic France), with his staunch anti-Masonic publishing friend, Abel Clarin de la Rive. In 1887, he had an audience with Pope Leo XIII, who rebuked the bishop of Charleston for denouncing the anti-Masonic confessions as a fraud and, in 1896, sent his blessing to an anti-Masonic Congress of Trent. Doubts about Vaughan's veracity and even her existence began to grow, and finally, Taxil promised to produce her at a lecture to be delivered by him on 19 April 1897. To the amazement of the audience (which included a number of priests), he announced that Diana was one of a series of hoaxes. He had begun, he said, by persuading the commandant of Marseille that the harbor was infested with sharks, and a ship was sent to destroy them. Next, he invented an underwater city in Lake Geneva, drawing tourists and archaeologists to the spot. He thanked the bishops and Catholic newspapers for facilitating his crowning hoax, namely his conversion, which had exposed the anti-Masonic fanaticism of many Catholics. Diana Vaughan was revealed to be a simple typist in his employ, who laughingly allowed her name to be used by him.The audience received these revelations with indignation and contempt. Afterwards, Taxil left the hall, where policemen escorted him to a neighboring café. He then moved away from Paris. He died in Sceaux in 1907. First Greek Edition. Rare. Only one copy in OCLC: 758917323.
Complete in 3 volumes: 47,577 + 88,519 + 120,619,xxi pp., with frontispiece in each volume, 25cm., original softcovers, pages still uncut, good condition, weight: 3.8kg., R105802
xv + 291pp., 26cm., softcover, text in Portuguese, good condition, R105801
Louvain, Museum lessianum (Section Missiologique Nr.5), 1926, 401pp.+ frontispice & 1 carte dépliante, br.orig., non coupé
401pp.+ frontispice & 1 carte dépliante, dans la série "Museum Lessianum. Section Missiologique" No.5, reliure cart. (plats marbrés, dos en toile), brochure originale conservée et reliée, 23cm., bon état, C99608
404pp., édition originale de 1864, br.orig. (dos renforcé), 19cm., bon état, R79651
48pp., wat roestplekjes, 2e herziene uitgave
Seuil 1991. In-8 broché de 509 pages. Bon état
Paris, Seuil 1991. In-8 broché de 509 pages illustrées. Très bon état
274pp.+ frontispice, br.orig., 2e éd.
In 24° (cm 7,2 x 12,9), legatura piena pelle coeva con tracce d'uso, titoli e fregi in oro al dorso; pp 360, antiporta figurata con gesuita i abiti secolari, che regge cartiglio con il titolo dell'opera: "Le Jésuite défroqué - Ex praecepto Sanctissimi"; dalla bocca esce cartiglio, un fumetto ante litteram: "Drap d'Espagne - Serge de Rome", accenno ai tessuti di cui erano fatti gli abiti secolari e gli abiti ecclesiastici. Al frontespizio sfera armillare. Frontespizio bicolore, sfera armillare, Esemplare in buone condizioni, bruniture accentuate non deturpanti. Altra edizione di quest'opera, dialogo satirico tra un abate ed un gesuita secolarizzato, compendio di tutte le accuse contro i Gesuiti: falsità, intrighi politici, ipocrisia, ecc., fu pubblicata in epoca coeva sotto lo pseudonimo di Rexelias Umeau, con titolo "Le Jésuite sécularisé" (Cfr. British Library). British Library dà 1685 come data di impressione, e come A. Claude Maimbourg; la "Lettre de l'auteur" delle pp 5-10 è sottoscritta "R. La Mer", che BL identifica come pseudonimo dell'Abbé Dupré, autore di simili pamphlet antigesuitici. CCFr indica come A. Jean Chastain prêtre, e censisce esemplare analogo ma con paginazione 244 pp, dal titolo: "Le Jésuite défroqué. Dialogue entre un abbé, un docteur en théologie et un Jésuite", impresso probabilmente nei Paesi Bassi in base al materiale tipografico. Curiosamente, esiste un "Jésuite défroqué" del 1829, citato da Quérard. Esemplari censiti in CCFr e COPAC. Barbier lettera "J". <br> <br> <br> <br> <br> <br> <br> <br> <br> <br> <br> <br> <br> <br> <br> <br> <br> <br> <br> <br> <br> <br> <br> <br> <br> <br> <br> <br> <br> <br>
In-4, plein vélin souple de l'époque, (2), 95, (5) p., prem. et dern. f. bl., armoiries royales au titre, bandeaux et lettrines gravés sur bois. Rare édition originale in-4° imprimée à Paris, de cette pièce capitale dans l'histoire tourmentée des relations entre la compagnie de Jésus et l'Université de Paris. Par lettres patentes du 12 octobre 1609, Henri IV avait accordé aux jésuites le droit d'enseigner dans leur collège parisien, provoquant l'hostilité de la Sorbonne. A la suite de l'assassinat du roi et de la mise en cause de la Compagnie dans le régicide, la Faculté prit la décision de s'opposer à leur arrivée et déposait un recours dans ce sens devant le Parlement de Paris. Le 15 décembre 1611 une citation à comparaître était notifiée aux jésuites. Pierre de La Martelière plaide pour l'Université, Jacques de Montholon pour les jésuites. A l'issue des audiences, l'avocat général Servin somme les Jésuites de se conformer aux positions de la Sorbonne quant aux libertés de l'Église gallicane. Le Parlement de Paris entérine les conclusions de Servin et, par arrêt du 22 décembre, interdit aux jésuites d'enseigner à Paris. L'arrêt figure en fin de ce volume avec la permission d'imprimer datée du 18 janvier 1612. Les hostilités entre l'Université de Paris et les jésuites ne prirent vraiment fin, faute de combattants, qu'à la suppression de la Compagnie en 1762. ("Bibliothèque historique de la France", 44650). Quelques rousseurs. Bel exemplaire, dans sa première reliure de vélin souple.
Paris, Langlois Fils, 1826, in-8, legatura ottocentesca in mezza pelle, titolo e filetti in oro al dorso, pp. (6), XII, 436. Manca il ritratto in antiporta. Qualche fioritura. Rapporto sulla Dottrina morale della Società di Gesù e requistoria contro di essa indirizzata al Parlamento di Bretagna.
xxvii + 1008pp., in the series "Quellen und Forschungen zur Geschichte, Literatur und Sprache Österreich und seiner Kronländer", 24cm., original softcover (with some minor wear), few annotations in pencil in index and first 8 pages (can be erased easily), few occasional foxing, else good, rare, R106562
2 volumes (complete): together 1878 + 4 pp., publisher's hardcover bindings in red cloth, 27cm., very good condition, [Photomechanischer Nachdruk mit Berichtigungen und Ergänzungen, Paderborn 1934], R54588